Build update:
The new DeepBook Predict testnet is live, and Anker is migrating to the updated integration. 🫡
For now, Anker is in demo-data mode: live quotes and on-chain transactions are temporarily disabled.
You can still browse the product flow while we complete the migration.
Live benchmark update:
In this snapshot, Anker’s matched BTC Buy Low APR is 1.8x-2.7x the Binance benchmark across visible rows.
Built with @DeepBookonSui Predict legs: Live quotes, not fixed yield.
Anker Protocol is live on Sui testnet.
Self-custody CEX-style Dual Investment:
- BTC Buy Low
- live CEX APR benchmarks
- transparent DeepBook Predict legs
Structured yield should be inspectable before you sign.
Today we’re introducing Predict.
Onchain options have been stuck at ~$100M in TVL while perp DEX volume hit $7T+ last year. The gap is architectural.
Predict is the third composable financial primitive in the DeepBook stack.
Builders can create binary markets, options (calls, puts, spreads), leveraged products, and structured instruments that integrate directly with Spot and Margin.
Testnet is live. Mainnet coming soon.
Spot. Margin. Predict.
https://t.co/LBiMNNLYGx
@aslan_web3
My main concern with DeepBook Predict is the role of PLP.
If PLP is just cold-start / backstop liquidity, that makes sense. But if PLP is designed to be the permanent main counterparty to user flow, then this looks less like a prediction exchange and more like a protocol-run risk warehouse.
A healthy prediction market should eventually be balanced by external makers, user order flow, transparent risk transfer, and hedging. If the protocol vault quotes too wide, users won’t trade. If it quotes too tight, sophisticated traders will pick it off and PLP LPs eat the toxic flow.
DeepBook’s strongest asset is CLOB market structure. Predict should use PLP as a backstop, not as the market itself.